A colossal mattress covering more than 100 square meters is not something you would typically find in a leading art museum. However, on the second floor of MAXXI Museum in Rome, on view until September, viewers will find just that.
There, in gallery five, one of the darlings of Italian contemporary art, Paola Pivi, has created a monumental public art installation in the form of a massive bed that people can literally crawl in.
Curated by Hou Hanrou together with Anne Palopoli, the monographic showing of Pivi’s work builds on earlier themes in the artist’s work, namely, subverting what they call “the classical confines between public space and intimacy.”
Entering the space, one is immediately confronted with new works installed on the ceiling. Colourfully connected textile knots form along the ceiling, their playful ambiance giving the space the feeling of an anime film set, I thought.
The exhibition connects many of the major themes that have characterized Pivi’s career since winning the Golden Lion at the Venice Biennale in 1999, surreal experiences that develop along a theme of what the artist has referred to in the past as “magical realism.:
At MAXXI in Rome, Pivi’s installation breaks from some of her earlier forms by applying comic and whimsy to a piece of domestic design, the bed.
By contrast, Pivi’s works are mostly synthetic, an ode perhaps to minimalism but also to cost and access.
Climbing inside the mattress sculpture, an evacious unease takes over. Will others enter too? How will I/should I react? Thankfully, the mattress is large enough to accommodate several dozen people at once, so my unease of being next to unknown strangers in a bed soon gave way to a genuine sense of playfulness.
Leaving MAXXI, I remembered that art can and should appeal to a sense of play and pleasure, and that it should do so more often. Pivi’s latest project in Rome is certainly something to bounce through if you find yourself in the Italian capital this summer, because, I can now say, the bouncier the art, the bouncier the heart.
03 April 2019 – 08 September 2019. PAOLA PIVI. WORLD RECORD
Also published on Medium.
Editor’s Note: This interview has been edited for clarity and length. The full, unedited version…
This article, written by museum educator Yuna Dranichnikova (www.yunadranichnikova.art), is featured in the second edition…
Redefining Success Through Purpose, Peace, and Resilience This issue's theme, SUCCESS, challenges conventional definitions and…
Manifesta, the European Nomadic Biennial, has for 30 years moved across Europe, establishing itself as…
The popular NFT project Doodles has partnered with McDonald's, marking a significant milestone for NFTs…
Does art have the power to save the world? This question has astounding resonance. Art…